"You can tell when somebody's owned," the doctor's driver said about Murray's relationship with the documentary's producers. "It was obvious."

Producers wined, dined Jackson doctor to get access

Even as Conrad Murray, the doctor convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the death of Michael Jackson, was pleading his already-decided-upon case on "Today," a security guard who drove him to and from court says the physician was given lavish perks by producers of a documentary.

Louis Perry, head of Kadima Security Services, said producers often took Murray to alcohol-filled dinners at upscale restaurants, paid for a 12-seat van outfitted with cameras and may have paid for the suit Murray wore on Monday, when he was convicted.

"They paid to have full access," Kadima said. "They were shadowing his every move."

It remains unclear whether the perks Murray received run afoul of regulations intended to prevent convicts from profiting from their crime.

Perry said he couldn't estimate how much was spent on Murray during the six-week trial. He said he wasn't sure if producers paid for Murray's new wardrobe, but he was told to bring the doctor to an upscale department store where a tailor was waiting for him.

"You can tell when somebody's owned," he said. "They owned him. It was obvious."

"I went there to take care of a healthy man, who said he was fine, to just keep surveillance in case my kids get sick or I get the flu, help us to choose right, better foods, and wash our hands so we don't get infected," Murray said in the film. "But once I got in there I was entrapped."

The former "Full House" toddlers were chosen over Dakota and Elle Fanning, Beyoncé and Solange Knowles and Rooney and Kate Mara.

"I feel like Mary-Kate's constantly evolving," Ashley recently told Net-a-Porter of her sister's style. "What she does is when she finds a proportion or a silhouette or a specific outfit, she'll wear it until she's over it -- which could be a week or it could be a year."

And while Mary-Kate dubs her sister "very classic and modern," she contends that Ashley is not without her idiosyncrasies. "There's always sort of a sense of a bohemian vibe," she says.